Review of Asian Studies Volume 18 (2016) 105-132 Head: Fallujah



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Enemy Forces


In April, Al-Fallujah had been defended by about 500 “hardcore” and 2,000 “part time” insurgents. In November, Time Magazine determined that the number of insurgents had grown to 3,000-4,000. One reporter for the New York Times estimated roughly the same number were present, but believed that many enemy fighters, especially their leaders, fled before the actual attack began. According to one ABC News correspondent, by 24 September 2004, he had been told by a senior U.S. official that they estimated the enemy strength to be nearly 5,000, mostly non-Iraqi insurgents. He also reported that this same official had declared their primary goal was to capture Abu Musab al Zarqawi who was supposed to be in Al-Fallujah.31
Ominously, for the Coalition, not only had the number of enemy present increased, but Iraqi insurgents and foreign Mujahideen fighters had built formidable fortified defenses throughout the city. They dug a labyrinth of tunnels and trenches, prepared spider holes and planted an extensive number and variety of IEDs. Within many of the abandoned homes in Al-Fallujah, the insurgents placed several large propane bottles, gasoline drums, and ordnance, wired to a remote trigger they could detonate when Coalition troops entered the buildings. They blocked streets with “Jersey” barriers behind which they could attack unsuspecting Allied forces entering a house or neighborhood. The enemy had a variety of advanced small arms much of which had been given to them in April by the U.S. who thought they were friends. These included M-14s, M-16s, body armor, uniforms, and helmets.32
To make matters worse for the Marines assault units, the enemy had placed cleverly disguised booby traps in various buildings and vehicles, including wiring doors and windows to grenades and other ordnance. Anticipating U.S. designs to take control of the roof tops of high buildings, they bricked up stairwells to the roofs of many buildings, creating paths into prepared fields of fire which they hoped the Americans would try to enter. Final intelligence reports predicted that Allied units might encounter Chechens, Libyans, Syrians, Iranians, Saudis, Filipino Muslims as well as Iraqis--mostly Sunnis. These reports anticipated that most of Al-Fallujah’s civilian population had fled the city, thus, reducing the potential for noncombatant casualties. They believed that 75–90 percent of the population of 300,000 had departed.33
It was a battle that most Coalition (especially U.S.) leaders and combat troops realized would be difficult and bloody. The troops themselves worried out loud that many might not make it out alive. With nearly six months to prepare, the rebel forces inside Al-Fallujah had had time to build formidable defenses. To quote one official report, “American forces entering the city would face a bewildering array of improvised explosive devices (IEDs), vehicle-borne improvised explosive devices (VBIEDs), mines, roadblocks, strong points, and well-constructed fighting positions.” Worse, “Many of the insurgents were foreign Islamic extremists who were more than willing to die.” Besides, they were convinced that since “they had stopped the Marines in April,” they could attain “victory” again.34
Between early May and late October, representatives of the interim Iraqi government, headed by Prime Minister Iyad Allawi, continued negotiations with the rebels in a desperate effort to end the conflict peacefully. It proved to be a futile gesture. On 30 October 2004, U.S. officials initiated airstrikes against suspected militant pockets in Al-Fallujah even as they prepared for a major ground operation to root out insurgents in what had become an enemy stronghold. Airpower would play a major role in the second part of the struggle.
If at First You Don’t Succeed, “Try, Try Again!”
In November 2004, one of the most significant battles of OIF took place in this city whose name would soon go down in U.S. military history with Khe Sanh, Guadalcanal, Antietam and Bunker Hill. The fight to gain total control of the city of Al-Fallujah in early-November has been seen as infamous and heroic. The bitter resistance faced and the hard fought victories have made it a name to remember among historians and military personnel. Designated Operation Phantom Fury, it officially lasted from 7 November to 23 December 2004 and, as detailed above, was spearheaded by both U.S. Marine and Army elements and British troops of the famous “Black Watch” battalion.35
It was a fight in which Coalition, especially U.S., airpower played a significant role. Close Air Support weapon systems played the greatest role, particularly gunships such as the AC-130s which participated almost totally at night for fear of being attacked by highly accurate surface-to-air missiles (SAMs) which the enemy possessed. It was tactical standard operating procedure for the gunships and had been since the Vietnam War. The bitter and bloody fighting in and around the city caused some ground commanders to complain that keeping one of the most powerful ground-support weapons out of the fight in daylight was forcing them to fight with one hand tied behind their backs.36 However, risking one of these scarce and important assets was something that the Air Force was loathe to do after losing one during the First Gulf War.
According to respected airpower expert Rebecca Grant, even though “the public focus” was on the land war, “coalition air forces were deeply involved in urban ‘stability’ operations.” In fact, the November 2004 sweep of the Iraqi town of Al-Fallujah became “the benchmark for airpower in urban joint force warfare.”37 Many analysts agreed that Al-Fallujah became a model of modern urban-warfare and its “resolution.” It was combat in the most bitter and arduous definition of that term. Once President George W. Bush declared “mission accomplished” in OIF, the next phase focused on what military leaders called “stability operations.” The doctrine underwriting this phase of operations evolved from Army experiences in Panama (Just Cause) and Southeastern Europe (Operation Allied Force) in which they concluded after a regime change they would have to pacify and stabilize the invaded nation under a new indigenous (hopefully democratic) regime. By the next century, most Army officials saw this as a key final step for future military missions.38
Specifically, “stability operations” combined defensive and offensive operations with support processes to form the key aspects of the new combined-arms doctrine. Army planners developed this new doctrine in four phases. The first two dealt with preparations and planning followed by Phase III, “Decisive Combat Operations and Phase IV, “Stability Operations.” In previous cases, Phase IV had been relatively easy to implement mainly because the local populations were generally supportive of the U.S. and glad to see the end of the dictatorial regime of the overthrown government. This was not entirely the case in Iraq. Iraq proved to be much more difficult, and Al-Fallujah was like removing a deeply entrenched wisdom tooth. In fact, it was a bloody test that created formidable demands on Allied ground forces and vital air forces. To quote Dr. Grant, “Fallujah marked the unveiling of an urban-warfare model based on persistent air surveillance, precision air strikes, and swift airlift support. Together, these factors took urban operations to a new and higher level.”39
Operations Phantom Fury and Al-Fajr
As noted, Department of Defense officials originally designated the tactical operation to secure Al-Fallujah Phantom Fury. Later, the Minister of Defense in the new Iraqi government renamed it Operation Al-Fajr, an Arabic term for “dawn.” Iraqi officials promised their American counterparts they could expect about 2,000 ISF troops to fight with the Allies but, as the jump off date approached, Gen. George W. Casey Jr., the commander of Central Command (CENTCOM) and senior U.S. commander in Iraq, had to admit he did not really know how many Iraqis would participate. With or without their so-called allies, Coalition forces finally launched their assault late on 7 November 2004.
One key factor in making this attack was the need for the U.S. to regain control of the city from insurgents in preparation for national elections scheduled for January 2005. In one regard, this seemed to make sense in a classic Clauswitzian manner if one agrees that war is an extension of diplomacy and politics. In Al-Fallujah’s this mattered little since of the population of 300,000 civilians, 75-90 percent had fled.40
Led by U.S. Marine assault units, the Allies quickly captured two strategic bridges and a hospital situated on a peninsula formed by the Euphrates River which U.S. intelligence believed led to an enemy fall back zone if they were expelled from central Al-Fallujah. Later, evidence suggested that the insurgents were using the hospital as a propaganda center by broadcasting false information on the number of civilian casualties. As the American and British advance proceeded, the Iraqi 36th Commando Battalion took charge of Al-Fallujah General Hospital in order to provide medical services to injured civilians. The use of this unit would have later consequences since it was mostly a “political” unit comprised of individuals from the five major Iraqi political parties. In fact, the only competent personnel were Kurds. Among some of the Kurds, the U. S. enthusiasm for their support led them to hope, indeed, believe that after the conflict, the Americans would support their efforts for an independent Kurdish state.41
One major problem the Allies faced from the very beginning was the aforementioned maze of tunnels under and through the city which the enemy used either to go from weapons cache to weapons cache or to escape hopeless situations. The most frustrating aspect of these tunnels was that many were under mosques and schools. The Coalition was reluctant to attack schools, and international law protected mosques from attack unless it could be absolutely proved they were being used for military purposes.42

As the attack began, Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi declared a national state of emergency to stem violence which had erupted elsewhere just prior to the assault on Al-Fallujah. In the city itself, he imposed a 24-hour curfew on all residents who were warned not to carry weapons. With American forces having cordoned off the city, no one was allowed access which was a discernible difference from the previous April when the enemy exploited the all too loose blockade to infiltrate personnel and supplies into the city.43


On 9 November, the Allies began intensive air strikes which devastated several major buildings and the train station prior to U.S. troops moved into south Al-Fallujah. Throughout the campaign, ground forces received abundant support from a combination of highly accurate CAS and artillery fire as they began to enter the city's maze of streets and alleys. Coalition forces frequently reported observing secondary explosions during air and artillery strikes which evidence suggested were explosions of weapons caches. By 1700 hours, the Marines had cut all the electrical power in the city and were making steady advances into the northeastern part of Al-Fallujah. As night fall came, they had pushed into the center of the city about 800 to 1,000 yards, and set up defensive positions in preparation for resuming the offensive. On the western side of the city, Allied units ran into heavy fire which slowed their advance. Having to root out the enemy in house-to-house fighting also caused their advance to be more protracted. Reports from the battle areas indicated that the enemy still had ease of movement in some parts of the city. At the end of the day, American officials announced the capture of 38 insurgents, four of which were foreign fighters. Two Marines died in a bulldozer accident.44
That same day, leaders of the Iraqi Islamic Party, the major Sunni political faction, denounced the attack on Al-Fallujah and withdrew from the interim government. The Sunni clerics of the Muslim Scholars Association, which represented 3,000 mosques, called for a boycott of the January 2005 national elections. To make matters worse, that afternoon, one of Prime Minister Allawi's cousins, the man's wife and daughter-in-law were kidnapped in Baghdad and threatened with execution unless he ended the assault on Al-Fallujah.45
The following day, Marine leaders reported that they held 70 percent of the city, which included the mayor’s office, several mosques, a commercial center and other major civic objectives. Employing PGMs, the Allies continued targeted airstrikes on buildings that held insurgent forces. American officials publically proclaimed that Coalition troops had taken the neighborhood of Jolan in northwestern Al-Fallujah with less resistance than expected. The paucity of opposition continued as U.S forces seized and crossed Al-Fallujah’s main east-west highway. American units in the southwestern parts of the city, specifically in the neighborhoods of Resala and Nazal, reported heavy resistance. General Casey predicted that fighting would increase as the Coalition drove through the outer ring of defenses into the heart of the city where insurgents were expected to leave a myriad of IEDs. Many Allied soldiers reported receiving fire from schools and mosques, often by women and children.46
As the assault surged forward, new reports confirmed earlier speculation that the enemy was hiding arms under mosques in the city. Lt. Gen. Thomas Metz, the commander of foreign military operations in Iraq, announced that many of the mosques searched housed munitions and weapons. Specifically, the U.S. Marines’ 7th Regimental Combat Team (RCT) along with the 5th Battalion, 3rd Brigade of the Iraqi Army seized Al Tawfiq Mosque. In turn, the Iraqi Police Service’s Emergency Response Unit took the Hydra Mosque supported by the 2nd Battalion, 1st Brigade of the Iraqi Intervention Force and U.S. Marines from the 7th RCT. American marines and soldiers, supported by Iraqi Security Forces, captured the Muhammadia Mosque in one of the biggest clashes of the Al-Fallujah campaign. Later, it was confirmed that the insurgents were using this mosque as a command and control center. A convention center across the street from the mosque was also captured in addition to two ancillary facilities in which weapons, munitions and IED-materials were hidden. Eight marines were killed in that operation as well as dozens of insurgents.47
On 11 November 2004, some of the more sobering events took place. First, Allied forces uncovered what Maj. Gen. Abdul Qader, the local Iraqi forces commander, called “slaughter houses,” lined in black cloth, where terrorists made video footage showing hostages being berated and killed. Later, that same day, two Marine Super Cobra attack helicopters were hit by ground fire and forced to land in separate incidents near Al-Fallujah. The crews were not injured and were eventually rescued. By the end of the day, Americans forces had totally secured the Jolan neighborhood and turned it over to Iraqi forces. This area had been the main headquarters of the insurgents.48
By the 12th, Coalition officials could announce they had taken 80 percent of the city and believed they would have total control of Al-Fallujah within 48 hours with full pacification being reached within a week. The imminent victory had already cost the lives of 18 Americans and five Iraqis. All totaled, 164 U.S. and Iraqi troops had been wounded, with an estimated 600 insurgents killed. They also reported that the insurgents had been pushed into the southern part of town. In addition, 151 enemy troops were detained by coalition troops. An additional 300 individuals who had negotiated surrender from within a mosque that day were soon moved in with them. According to one report, Allied units continued to move in a southeasterly direction from Highway 10 into the Resala, Nazal and Jebail areas. One main concern was the existence of sleeper cells that might pop up once the initial Coalition assault ended.49
By 13 November, American officials claimed they had achieved control of most of the city, and a house-to-house mop up sweep was about to commence. In turn, the Iraqi national security adviser reported that more than 1,000 insurgents had been killed in fighting in Al-Fallujah, with an additional 200 captured. As promised the mop up operation began two days later, on the 15th, with leadership estimating it would take four to six days. This process was made more difficult by the extensive subterranean tunnel labyrinth under the city that focused on a large bunker filled with munitions. Most of the tunnels were protected by numerous IEDs and booby-traps. To conserve American lives, troops normally entered the houses over the tunnels after tanks smashed through the walls or sappers used explosives to blast open the doors. In nearly every case, the Marines discovered large weapons caches. As this grizzly process unfolded, Coalition aircraft continued to provide CAS and reconnaissance support for Marines attacking buildings throughout the city.50
In the meantime, the Iraqi Red Crescent continued to complain they were unable to deliver food, water and medical aid to civilians in the city. Instead, their trucks went to the surrounding villages where tens of thousands of displaced civilians camped in tents to escape the conflict. One cruel irony was that, in spite of the public criticism of the Americans for not letting supplies into Al-Fallujah, to have done so would have risked the lives of the relief personnel and prolonged the campaign. Indeed, most of the supplies were from the United States as were the vehicles. Worst of all, leadership announced on 16 November, that the U.S. death toll had increased to 38 and the Iraqi’s to six. A total of 278 Americans had been wounded. Estimates placed the enemy death toll at 1,200.51
Throughout the remainder of the month, sporadic fighting continued at an ever decreasing level, with Allied forces eventually conducting a search-and-cordon operation in and around Al-Fallujah—mostly in the north. The action resulted in the detention of 17 fighters who were transferred to Abu Ghuraib Prison for further questioning. The final skirmish occurred on

23 December 2004. It cost the lives of three U.S. Marines and 24 insurgents. By the end, Operation Phantom Fury had the ignominious distinction of being the bloodiest battle of the Iraq or Second Persian Gulf War.52


As one official history admitted even though the battle had been an Allied victory, it had been fraught with problems which included, “communications, equipment, breaching operations, intelligence, and perception issues.”53 The same report concluded that, “The second battle of Al-Fallujah proved a costly endeavor for US forces. Although casualties were light compared to urban combat in the past, 70 Americans were killed and over 600 wounded.”54 There are others who would argue that all of this was a needless exercise in futility considering that within less than a year they had to perform the entire thing over.

The White House and other U.S. leaders announced that Al-Fallujah had been taken which they translated as a great victory. But what kind of victory was it? Some suggested that with more victories like this one the U.S. could not afford to win the larger war. Jonathan F. Keiler, in the Naval Institute Proceedings of January 2005, simply asked, “Was the battle of Al-Fallujah a victory or a defeat?” Then, he reminded his readers that, “The Marine Corps’ military operations in urban terrain doctrine recognizes that tactical success does not necessarily translate to strategic victory.” He concluded with an ominous warning, “It is hard to say whether the drawn-out process of securing that medium-sized Iraqi city was a one-time event or the beginning of a trend. I hope it is the former.”55


Of course, this evaluation came very soon after the battle concluded and during a time when many American analysts, historians, politicians, military leaders, and citizens remained hopeful that the Iraqi adventure (including the battles for Fallujah) had been justified and might still come to very positive conclusion. Since then, both these notions have been thoroughly eroded. It is also important to realize that most of this initial scrutiny focused on the ground engagement since so many died on both sides in the major battle of OIF, which took place after “victory” had been declared. Only recently have experts like Dr. Becky Grant and others begun to examine the role of airpower in this bloody engagement both from the standpoint of how it performed and if it should have played a larger role? This next section examines these questions and others regarding how Allied air forces were or should have been employed at Al-Fallujah.

The Role of Airpower
From the time that Allied forces first invaded Iraq in March 2003 until they departed on 18 December 2011, the main battles had involved urban warfare. This should not be surprising since roughly 75 percent of Iraqis live in the 16 largest cities in the country. While the first phase of OIF focused on ending Saddam’s regime and eventually capturing him, the fighting itself did not end on 1 May 2003 when President Bush declared “mission accomplished.” In the north, the Baathists and Sunni Muslims who had dominated the government and army under the toppled dictator continued to resist. As noted, by March 2004, this resistance had coalesced in Al-Fallujah. In the two battles that followed, combatants confronted all the classic features of urban warfare. Standard procedure for taking a town or city had always prescribed the use of ground forces, while aerial attacks had normally occurred after a ground assault had failed or ground to a halt such as in the case of the World War II Battle of Caen.56
As Dr. Grant said, “Commanders engaged in urban warfare long have regarded airpower as a blunt instrument. In battles from Stalingrad in the 1940s to Grozny in the mid-1990s, airpower’s primary purpose was to turn buildings into rubble—and fast.” Air Force leaders were caught in a conundrum over how to approach their role once the conflict in Al-Fallujah began. What they discovered but has largely been ignored was that, “Fallujah marked the unveiling of an urban-warfare model based on persistent air surveillance, precision air strikes and swift airlift support. Together, these factors took urban operations to a new and higher level.”57
As mentioned, the first battle for Al-Fallujah manifested itself when insurgents ambushed and killed four U.S. contractors on 31 March 2004 and, later that day, five soldiers with an IED a few miles north of the city. American leadership reasoned that these horrific killings demanded retaliation against those specifically responsible for them. As a result, on 4 April 1,300 members of the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, under Lt. Gen. James T. Conway initiated Operation Vigilant Resolve in an attempt to locate those responsible for the slayings and draw out other insurgents. Prominently featured in this manhunt were AC-130 gunships which targeted specific sites designated by Marines calling for precision air strikes against buildings sheltering terrorists or insurgents. This effort ended in utter frustration due to political pressures from the interim Iraqi government’s leaders. Indeed, “This abortive April foray . . . was no pitched battle of army on army. The key to the strategy lay in isolating insurgent leaders and strong points inside the city.” The key component had been airpower and not ground power.58
The impact of airpower manifested itself since it not only covered the withdrawal of coalition ground forces but also continued to fly ISR, CAS and interdiction sorties during the period between the two battles. As the air war expanded, Gen. Richard B. Myers, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS), remarked that the AC-130 gunships and fixed-wing aircraft attacks had had devastating results. He concluded, “There were a lot of enemy [fighters] that died there.” In spite of the clear signs of success by airpower, many ground commanders remained convinced that only ground units could carry out urban assault missions. To this end, they normally never called for CAS from AC-130s unless night time conditions were perfect. They might call on fighter aircraft with PGMs in the daytime as a last resort.59
During the ensuing seven months prior to the Second Battle of Fallujah, the air component played an ever expanding role in the intensifying search for prime insurgency targets in Al-Fallujah and other cities. These efforts came more and more to rely on constant ISR efforts employing both air and space assets. During this phase of the conflict, air planners had assiduously analyzed and interpreted the data they had gathered while simultaneously applying their efforts to bolstering overall political goals of the campaign. As a result, they kept a steady and measured process of air attacks underway even though the ground assaults had stopped. Throughout, they targeted repeated attacks against sites believed to be the hideouts of enemy leaders such as al-Zarqawi. General Ryan admitted, “There was never any delusion that airpower was capable of stopping door-to-door thuggery.” Still, he believed that hitting these kinds of targets was like cutting back the “leaves and branches” if not hitting at the roots.60
As combat unfolded in Al-Fallujah, “the air component proved it could do quite a lot to target those engaged in door-to-door thuggery” since the “combination of persistent ISR and on-call strike aircraft was nothing short of stunning.” New aircraft, like the MQ-1 Predator UAV, was only beginning to demonstrate the total impact of its sensors and shooter technology. During the weeks prior to the second assault, this UAV and other aerial platforms not only located high value targets with uncanny accuracy, but their ability to “hunt for insurgents soon evolved into successful battle space shaping” All this climaxed in early fall when “a series of preplanned strikes took out key insurgent targets—and did so with great precision.” In one case, a Predator located and followed a vehicle carrying weapons and ordnance as it parked under a carport in one of the city’s compounds. Once given permission to fire, it launched a Hellfire missile into the parked vehicle destroying it without damaging the nearby house.61
As mentioned, the main attack on Al-Fallujah began in the late night hours of 7/8 November and lasted, officially, for eight days. Throughout, aircraft hit preplanned targets—such as barricaded insurgent sites—then shifted to on-call response. As intermittent fighting continued throughout the remainder of the year, strike sorties across Iraq increased with weekly ISR sorties alone reaching 161 and peaking at 379. In the end, the major advantages that Allied airpower afforded were: total air dominance; layered 24-hour support; joint integration, especially employing AC-130 CAS; strafing by gunships and fixed-wing fighter platforms such as the F-15; sustained and accurate ISR coverage; successful first-strike capability; ability to make immediate follow-on attacks; state-of-the-art airlift and medevac capabilities; and the most up-to-date PGMs and other ordnance such as the GBU-38 Joint Direct Attack Munitions (JDAM). Based on the advantages provided by airpower, and only by airpower, a new urban warfare model evolved out of this conflict. It was a paradigm that provided a margin of safety and superiority for forces on the ground while also taking the pursuit of major urban targets to a new level of proficiency through persistent use of such airpower roles as ISR and on-call strike.62
The Role of the Fixed-Wing Gunship: Critics and Supporters
During OIF, as had been the case during Operations Desert Shield/Storm, the most popular air asset for those on the ground proved to be the AC-130H, and later, AC-130U fixed-wing gunships. Most of the Army ground commanders around Al-Fallujah in 2004 argued that since ground forces were taking heavy casualties in close combat and the AC-130s were so effective the latter should take the risk to provide them CAS during daylight hours. These critics seemed to have forgotten the consequences of even minimal daylight on the “Spirit 03” during operations in Desert Storm on 31 January 1991. It was not that the Army did not like the AC-130s. One Army officer said, “The AC-130 — what a great platform. When it’s flying, the insurgents are killed by the buckets. However, they will not fly during the day …In Fallujah we had a better time during periods of darkness, and in the day [we] experienced difficulties because of the absence of the AC-130.”63
As gunship crews explained to their brothers on the ground the AC-130s electro-optical and infrared sensors were best employed at night. Human targets on the ground stand out on screens inside the specially fitted cargo airframe, which the shadows and clutter of daytime eliminated. On the other hand, the gunship has a large profile, flies in predictable orbits and is slow to maneuver out of harm’s way. While C-130 cargo aircraft flying tactical supply missions routinely fly daytime missions, they seek to avoid threat areas rather than linger right over them. CENTCOM Deputy Commander Lt. Gen. Lance L. Smith, USAF, noted, “If the situation absolutely required the AC-130 to operate during daylight hours, then it was used that way.” He also assured Inside Washington Publishers that, “Both the commanders and crews will do whatever is necessary to best support the troops on the ground, given the total complex of systems available.” Naturally, the AC-130 crews agreed with that assessment saying, “Obviously, we’ve surged aircraft in support of current operations. “There’s…twice as many [in Iraq] as four months ago.” This was correct since, by late 2004 there were at any one time, as many as twelve gunships in the Area of Responsibility (AOR) as opposed to the six that had originally been deployed. This was true even with demands for AC-130 services still urgently being sent to Washington by forces in Afghanistan.64
From 2003 to 2011, one of the biggest concerns for AC-130s was the threat of man-portable air defense systems or MANPADs. As these weapons proliferated, the risk to the AC-130s increased at a similar rate. As Smith noted, “To effectively employ its weapons … the AC-130 has to fly within the envelope of a number of enemy [MANPADs and anti-aircraft artillery], which this enemy has in quantity.” He concluded, “Even if it could survive — ‘a big if,’ it would either constantly be moving out of its orbit to avoid threats, or [it would] incur combat damage resulting in the system being unavailable for long periods of time due to repairs.” To the ground troops, the spectacular results of gunship’s 105mm were much appreciated as was the rapid rate of fire of the AC-130’s 40 mm cannon whose ordnance can pierce thin-skinned vehicles. The U model could engage two targets simultaneously and with its enhanced survivability, increased stand-off range, armor protection and electronic countermeasures, it executed nearly all the handful of daytime missions flown in dire emergencies. Most daylight CAS was flown by aircraft like the A-10 attack aircraft or F-16 fighters which employed internal guns and/or bombs/rockets to attack enemy positions. However, while they were more agile, their inability to loiter over the target limited how long they could support ground forces. 65
Throughout this period of insurgency, unlike the other attack aircraft, the AC-130 was in very short supply, having only eight H models and 13 U models--although four more of the advanced Spooky versions were in production and expected by 2006. Of course, one of the main disadvantages was the fact ground forces wanted the gunships and not everyone could have them. Senior leadership was not inclined to risk these high-demand/low-density (HD/LD) assets. Some ground commanders criticized such caution. One Army officer at Al-Fallujah complained that, “Instead of sticking it out and supporting the Marines [and] soldiers in the day with the best ISR [intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance] and air strike platform, they leave the area.” As a result, our troops fighting in very complex and difficult terrain are left to less efficient and less agile air platforms.” The truth was that AC-130 pilots and crews were always willing to jump in the fight to protect their comrades on the ground. Some even argued that MANPAD threats were relatively low given the higher altitudes at which they fly. Still, official policy restricted such daytime missions. This caution should not be sneered at considering that the loss of one gunship would cost 14 young lives and one of only 21 gunships.66
Some critics like Army Col. David Hunt, a former Green Beret, declared that: “It’s not the captains and the majors flying these missions. They’re the bravest of the brave! The generals are making a statement, ‘We’ll tell you how best to use our airplanes.’” He went on to say, “The problem is AFSOC’s [standard operating procedures], routine and legacy of not flying during the day.” “They are frankly ignoring the intelligence and actual capabilities of the insurgent.” Others went so far as to declare that most SAMS in Iraq “topped out in a range below the AC-130s normal operating altitude, but ‘these insurgents [also] are operating with old, worn-out equipment.” They concluded, “I’ve seen these MANPADs, and I have not found one that was in very good working order. All these factors make the risk well within the margins to fly during the day.” Hunt declared that, “The Air Force is still trying to protect [the gunships] from the rocket-propelled grenades and the SA-7s, [and] the truth is the Air Force will care more about their flying platforms than the infantry and special forces and Marines on the ground. If a guy on the ground says they want the AC-130, they should get it — now.”67
In response one senior Air Force leader replied that, “These are critical HD/LD assets that are not easily replaced!” However, he went on to say, “But given the other risks we are taking there with folks on the ground, if the AC-130s can provide a unique capability with persistence and precision, why wouldn’t we use them?” Even with such bravado noted, the truth was that dozens and, later, hundreds of Soviet/Russian-made SA-7s, -9s, -14s and -16s were discovered in caches all over Iraq where the insurgents were strongest. In retrospect we now know that the enemy had many more where these came from and were just waiting to deploy them against the slow flying Spectres/Spookys. As one Air Force officer later pointed out, “You cannot exactly predict what threat will be present.” Besides, from the beginning of OEF in 2001 to this very day, SOF aircrews have taken “huge risks” with the AC-130s in Iraq and Afghanistan almost “always” agreeing to come to the aid of their fellow Americans.68
As one might expect, this was not the first time this kind of debate had percolated to the surface. The daylight loss of 14 AC-130H crew members during action near Al-Khafji, Saudi Arabia, during the 1991 Persian Gulf War caused most Air Force special operators to be uneasy about committing their assets to daytime battles. Some ground personnel privately made it seem they are scared. However, this was a valid lesson, and there is a great deal of difference between being brave and fool-hardy. It is worth noting that in March 2002, some Army officers had criticized the Air Force for withdrawing an AC-130 from Roberts Ridge during Operation Anaconda in Afghanistan after an overnight battle in which friendly troops were under intense fire. The fact is the AC-130 was engaged for more than two hours and was running low on fuel. No backup gunship was sent due to daytime restrictions. As one former AFSOC commander said, “There are certainly times when they can fly in the daytime [however] it’s just that when [the threat] catches up with you, it can be disastrous.” Besides, as some ground commanders admit and most airmen already realize, it is up to senior commanders to appraise the big picture and utilize their assets prudently. After all, a threat always seems “most intense to the guys in the foxhole,” and soldiers tend to get attached to a particular platform. To quote General Smith, “taking stock of the bigger picture, commanders can provide capability around the clock for a sustained period of time by taking advantage of all the strengths of all the weapon systems available and employing them accordingly.”69
To quote Mike Klausutis, a highly experienced special operations expert, “The AC-130 is arguably the single best CAS platform to support troops in contact in night engagements. It can find and attack targets at night when other assets like the A-10 and F-16 are not nearly as effective.” All these aircraft have their strengths, and balancing the platform to use under any given circumstance in order to provide around-the-clock coverage is the essential issue.70
The After Affects
Officially, during the second battle for Al-Fallujah, the U.S. suffered 95 killed and 560 wounded, while insurgents had 1,350 killed and 1,500 captured. Civilian deaths were put at 800. Of a total population of 300,000, more than 200,000 civilians were displaced by the combat that totally destroyed nearly 40 percent of the city. In fact, the structural damage was lessened by the accuracy of airpower assets such as the AC-130. So many of the casualties came in the earliest moments of the offensive when, in an effort to avoid collateral damage Marines attempted to wind their way through the narrow streets that became perfect spots for ambushes and ideal killing zones. To stop the loss of life, commanders moved their forces at night when the AC-130s could provide CAS. More importantly, they gave up on sparing homes and civilian lives since the enemy was using them to shield their forces. The Second Battle of Fallujah proved the great virtues of the AC-130s and made it clear that to keep this most effective weapon should continue to be employed, potentially in more modern versions, in future conflicts.71
One article on the battle summed up the role of the gunships saying, the AC-130U gunship demonstrated its great value to the boots on the ground. Its precision fire support from the sky both day and night suppressed fortified and moving insurgent targets. The sophisticated fire control system with massive amounts of ammunition on board gives AC-130U the ability to provide a steady CAS without the need of FAC unlike other fixed-wing aircraft. Ground units only needed to provide both friendly and target positions, and the gunship took it from there. Different cannons on the AC-130U provided more choices of weaponry with smaller blast radii than bombs; hence they had lower risk of damage to friendly units and civilians.72
In simple terms, the battles for Al-Fallujah, especially the second one, proved to be the bloodiest involving American troops since the Vietnam War. Some experts went so far as to compare it to the Battle of Hue or Marine assaults in the Pacific during World War II. Specifically, the Allies had 107 killed and 613 wounded during Operation Phantom Fury. The United States forces had 54 killed and 422 wounded in the initial invasion in November and, as noted, by 23 December, when the operation was officially declared to be over, the numbers had increased to 95 killed and 560 wounded. In turn, British forces had four killed and ten wounded in two separate attacks in the outskirts of Al-Fallujah. Iraqi allies suffered eight killed and forty-three wounded. While there were never official figures based on an actual count, most estimates placed the number of insurgents killed at 1,200 to 1,500, with some numbers as high as 2,000 killed. Coalition forces captured around 1,500 insurgents. The Red Crescent/Cross reported that 800 civilians had been killed during the fighting.73
To quote Jonathan Keiler, “despite the superb performance of Marines and soldiers in Fallujah there is reason for concern. The 476 U.S. casualties represent about 8% of the total assault force, a low but not insignificant loss for less than two weeks of combat. Of equal concern had to be the fact that roughly 45 percent of those wounded in the operation were returned to action.” The Defense Department also reported that the initial OIF assault, between 19 March and 30 April 2003, led to 109 killed and 426 wounded. The casualty numbers during the Second Battle of Fallujah came close to that total.74
While the city itself suffered terrible damage to homes, mosques, city services, and businesses, it was not nearly as bad as previous urban battles such as Stalingrad or Hue, mainly due to the extensive use of precision airpower. Al-Fallujah, often referred to as the “City of Mosques,” was officially home to 133 mosques prior to the fighting. Afterward, some reports declared that 60 had been destroyed. The destruction was certainly predictable since, according to American military sources, 66 were used by the insurgents as arms caches and weapon strongpoints. These same accounts also claimed that of the roughly 50,000 buildings in Al-Fallujah, between 7,000 and 10,000 were destroyed and about half of the buildings still standing showed significant damage.75
Displaced persons also proved to be a major issue. Prior to Operation Vigilant Resolve in March-April 2004, most estimates placed the population at around 300.000. By the end of Operation Phantom Fury, more than 200,000 civilians were labeled by Iraqi authorities as “internally displaced persons” who either never returned or only came back reluctantly. At first, the Allies were loath to allow people back into the city. It was not until the end of December 2004, that residents, after undergoing a biometric identification process, were allowed to return if they wore their identification cards at all times. By the end of March 2005, with reconstruction moving along at snail’s pace and mostly consisting of clearing away rubble, most estimates put the number of returning inhabitants at 30 percent.76
As for the battle itself, no one can call it any more than a limited success. By September 2006, U.S. Marine Corps official reports concluded that while Al-Fallujah itself remained generally pacified, Al-Anbar province, which included Al-Fallujah was under “total insurgent control.” Worse, “insurgent attacks gradually increased in and around the city and although news reports were often few and far between, several reports of IED attacks on Iraqi troops were reported in the press.” Of special note was a suicide car bomb attack carried out on 23 June 2005 against a convoy, which killed six Marines and wounded thirteen others. Less than eight months after the bloodiest battle of the Iraq war, insurgents were again able to operate with impunity and in large numbers. As result of mounting violence around Al-Fallujah and in nearby Ramadi, a third offensive began in late September 2006 and lasted until mid-January 2007. In what became known as the “Third Battle of Fallujah” the enemy fought the Americans to a stalemate during what Iraqis called “the Great Sunni Awakening.” After four years of bitter fighting, the U.S. formally turned Al-Fallujah over to the Iraqi Provincial Authority and the Iraqi military forces. From every logical point of view, these battles had been a disappointment for Coalition forces.77
Some Good Things Did Come From the Battles
In spite of these criticisms of the Allied efforts at Al-Fallujah, there were positive aspects and results, too. The January elections did take place as scheduled and were mostly successful in their execution and the subsequent transition of power to a relatively democratic sectarian government. General Casey later remarked that, “The military and civil side had to work together . . . and this one team, one mission had to include the Iraqi Government. We set out to help make . . . this Interim Iraqi Government successful.” To him the Second Battle of Fallujah facilitated the January 2005 elections, and, he concluded, “I don’t believe that the elections would have come off if there was still a safe haven in Fallujah. I’m absolutely convinced of that. . . . It was one of the things that caused them to step up and vote and make a choice, and on the 30th, they did!”78
Lt. Gen. Lance L. Smith, CENTCOM Deputy Commander, echoed Casey’s words when he pointed out that, “Besides being a safe haven for leadership command and control, Al-Fallujah was a center for making IEDs that were being produced and used in other parts of the country to attack the Coalition.” I should add they were also being used to disrupt preparation for the January 2005 elections. Dr. Grant concluded in her article on Al-Fallujah that, “There was no doubt the second battle for Fallujah was a necessary one. Many of the estimated 2,000 insurgents in the city were killed and their sanctuary eliminated.”79 That is to say, at least for the time being and long enough to hold elections.
The Controversy Over Using white phosphorus
One last controversial aspect of the struggle for Al-Fallujah was the U.S. use of white phosphorous artillery rounds. While an extremely volatile issue that requires a great deal of evaluation on its own merit, there is not enough room to discuss the usage in detail. Still, it cannot be ignored in any discussion of Al-Fallujah. White phosphorus is an effective smoke producing agent in combat, especially when used as an artillery round. It burns quickly and rapidly to create a smoke bank to hide the movement of your own troops from the eyes of the enemy. Over the past century, the use of such agents in artillery shells and/or smoke grenades has become increasingly common. It can be used by infantry, mortars, tanks, artillery, and other armored vehicles. The negative side of its employment is that phosphorus is toxic in itself and white phosphorus can function as a particularly terrifying incendiary weapon since it burns quickly and at very high temperatures. It can easily set cloth, fuel and ammunition on fire and it is very difficult to extinguish because water is not very effective. While it is not illegal to use under the international Chemical Weapons Convention, its results, when used against humans, is so gruesome that it is used infrequently in cases where civilians are close to military targets.80
Throughout the second battle for Al-Fallujah in November 2004, while the U.S.

employed white phosphorus they were reluctant to discuss it with the media for obvious reasons. Even so, word of its usage filtered back to Western Europe and the U.S. At first, it was no big deal, then, on 8 November 2005, the one year anniversary of the start of the Second Battle of Al-Fallujah, Sigfrido Ranucci of Italy’s RaiNews24 released a gratuitous documentary entitled Fallujah, The Hidden Massacre. It was completely one-sided and designed to create public outrage and increase the number of viewers. It proved to be effective and very embarrassing to America. A week later, Defense Department spokesperson, Lt. Col. Barry Venable, publically confirmed the use of white phosphorus against well entrenched “enemy combatants.” However, he denied that civilians had been targeted. In spite of concerns expressed by the Iraqi government the situation soon began to cool off. On 30 November 2005, General Peter Pace not only admitted its use but called it a “legitimate tool of the military.” He explained that it was not a chemical weapon but an incendiary, and its use against enemy combatants was perfectly legal. The force of this statement seemed to defuse the matter at least in the U.S.81


One Special Shining Light
While the battles for Fallujah had been a bitter pill for the U.S. to swallow, there was one success story. In general, airpower and specifically AC-130s had proven their worth both with their ability to search and destroy enemy assets in an urban environment as well as being able to devastate insurgent forces in open and hidden positions. Most U.S. ground forces, especially the Marines, found particular comfort from gunship support during the insurgency phase of OIF, during which U.S. Marines faced most of their fighting in urban settings. They favored the gunships because of their accurate and sustained firepower, time on station, and advanced optics.
According to one Marine Corps report, the Marines on the ground liked that, “the AC-130s carried a lethal mix of firepower that varied slightly depending on whether it is an AC-130H Spectre, or AC-130U Spooky model.” The report noted that, “both models are equipped with a L60 40mm Bofors cannon capable of firing up to one hundred rounds per minute as well as a M102 105mm howitzer capable of shooting six to ten rounds per minute.” In addition, they reported that the Spooky models are equipped with 25mm GAU-12 “Equalizer” Gatling-type guns capable of firing four or six thousand rounds per minute. The report went on to reiterate that, “The primary missions for the AC-130 are close air support, air interdiction, and armed reconnaissance. Other missions include perimeter and point defense, escort, landing, drop and extraction zone support, forward air control, limited command and control, and combat search and rescue.” The report also focused on the fact there was a proposal on the table to retrofit all the existing H models with 25mm guns to allow them to fly at higher altitudes to avoid shoulder-fired SAMS which had begun to populate the battlefield during OIF and after. Not only did the author recount the virtues of the AC-130s but recommended that they be upgraded whenever possible to allow them to continue serving the Marines as they had in the past. This report is of interest because, in spite of the controversy, AC-130s had, as they had in every other previous war, won the respect of those fighting on the ground. It was not so much the Air Force, albeit they believed in the gunships, who wanted more and better gunships but those who served in the services for which the AC-130s worked so hard.82
The measure of any leader, especially a military leader, is his or her ability to embrace lessons obtained from past experiences, most often mistakes. This does not suggest they should be tied to past circumstances but, instead should posit how not to make the same mistake and how to anticipate what the future will bring. No fact is truer than military secrets being the most fleeting. This means that flexibility and constant concern for the men and women being asked to go in harm’s way is the greatest talent these leaders can possess. In the case of the AC-130s, operational tempo was so high during the years from OAF to the end of the Iraqi surge that learning lessons seemed to take a back seat to committing assets as quickly and effectively as possible. However, in the last few years, there have been efforts by some visionary Air Force leaders and some very innovative contractors and civil servants to not only upgrade the gunship’s lethality but its survivability. During this time we witnessed the full flowering of the AC-130.83
Some Final Observations
Ever since the last U.S. combat forces withdrew from Iraq in December 2011, Americans have been seeking some solace from this generally misguided adventure that was probably never necessary. Some even have suggested that OIF was concocted for political reasons mired in an arrogance of power. While that is an issue to be debated at another time and in another place, it must be noted that once the Coalition engaged the Iraqis in March 2003 to decapitate the government of the “Stalinist dictator” Saddam Hussein, the goals of OIF were supposed to be the discovery and dismantling of his so-called “Weapons of Mass Destruction” (WMDs). The ancillary goal was to topple Saddam Hussein and his government in order to allow the Iraqis to rebuild their government and nation. After President George W. Bush landed on the aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln on 1 May and declared “mission accomplished,” the goals seemed to become obscured. It was during this “pacification” or nation-building phase that the unrest and turmoil in the western regions of Iraq were fomented. It was in Al-Fallujah that they bore their bitter fruit. It was during the apparently never ending struggle for control of this little city of questionable strategic and tactical significance that the bloodiest battle of OIF took place. This multi-faceted struggle cost hundreds of lives, displaced thousands of civilians and left many Americans as frustrated as they had been a generation before with Vietnam.84
At least in this case, some positive lesson should have been learned with regard to the ever expanding role of airpower on and above the modern conventional battle field. Before Al-Fallujah few, if any, believed air assets played any role in urban warfare. The various roles these weapon systems performed in Al-Fallujah not only proved their worth but also caused many enlightened thinkers to wonder how many more roles they could have played. If this alone was the outcome of these conflicts, then it was a costly lesson indeed. However, if we can learn these lessons to the extent that we can limit the number of young men and women who we might have to send in harm’s way in future battles such as this one then, perhaps, those who paid such a precious price and their families and loved ones may be able to rest a little more peacefully.

1Among the best works on this engagement are, Bing West, No True Glory: A Frontline Account of the Battle for Fallujah (New York: Random/Bantam Books, 2005) [hereafter No True Glory]; Dick Camp, Operation Phantom Fury: The Assault and Capture of Fallujah, Iraq (Minneapolis, Minnesota: Zenith Press, 2009), [hereafter Phantom Fury]; Sgt. Seth Connor, USMC, Boredom By Day, Death By Night: An Iraq War Journal (Wheaton, Illinois: Tripping Light Press, 2007), [hereafter Iraq War Journal]. Bing West and his brother Owen have contributed accounts from his book, screen writing and advising on a new movie starring Harrison Ford as USMC General James “Mad Dog” Mattis entitled “No True Glory: The Battle for Fallujah.” West has also been an integral part of numerous documentary films by such groups as National Geographic.

2Jonathan F. Keiler, “Who Won the Battle of Fallujah?” The Naval Institute Proceedings, (January 2005), found in Military.com, [hereafter “Who Won?”], http://www.military.com/ NewContent/1,13190,NI_0105_Fallujah-p1,00.html.

3Ibid. One article that compares the combat intensity at Al-Fallujah to that at Hue is Robert D. Kaplan, “Five Days in Fallujah,” The Atlantic, July/August 2004, pp. 1-12, http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2004/07/five-days-in-fallujah/303450/, [hereafter “Five Days in Fallujah.”].

4Rebecca Grant, “The Fallujah Model,” Air Force Magazine, February 2005, [hereafter “Fallujah Model”], http://www.airforce-magazine.com/MagazineArchive/Pages/2005/February% 202005/0205.html.

5Col. Howard D. Belote, USAF, “Counterinsurgency Airpower: Air-Ground Integration for the Long War,” Air & Space Power Journal, Fall 2006, http://airpower.au.af.mil/airchronicles/ apj/apj06/fal06/belote.html. Original quote from Letter, Lt. Gen. Thomas F. Metz to Lt. Gen. Walter E. Buchanan, III, 9 February 2005.

6“Above Fallujah, layers of U.S. air cover,” Associated Press, 11 November 2004, http://www.nbcnews.com/id/6462834/ns/world_news-mideast_n_africa/t/above-fallujah-layers-u.s.-aircraft.html.

7Christian Parenti, “Scenes From a Nasty, Brutish Long War,” The Nation 19 May 2011, pp. 2-3, [hereafter “Brutish War”].

8“Iraqis in deadly clash with U.S. troops,” CNN, 29 April 2003, http://www.cnn.com/2003/ WORLD/meast/04/29/sprj.irq.falluja/index.html.

9“Violent Response,” HRW.org., 28 April 2003, http://www.hrw.org/reports/2003/ iraqfalluja/Iraqfalluja-04.htm#P273_41771, [hereafter “Violent Response”]; Dr. William Knarr and Major Robert Castro, USMC, with Dianne Fuller, IDA Paper P-4455, The Battle for Fallujah: Al Fajr – the Myth-buster (Alexandria, Virginia: Institute for Defense Analyses (IDA), Sept. 2009), pp. 11-13, [hereafter Battle for Fallujah]; Kaplan, “Five Days in Fallujah.”

10West, No True Glory, pp. 9-25; “Violent Response.” One article that provides damning evidence against the overreaction by U.S. Army troops is Chris Floyd and Rich Kastelein, “Violent Response: the U.S. Army in Al-Fallujah,” Empire Burlesque: High Crimes and Low Comedy, Human Rights Watch (May 2003), http://www.chris-floyd.com/fallujah/hrw/index.htm.

11“U.S. strikes at Iraqi resistance,” BBC News, 29 June 2003, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/ middle_east/3030494.tsm; “Bush firm despite Iraq attack,” BBC News, 1 July 2002, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/3034254.stm.

12“Attack on Fallujah police highlights lack of U.S. control in Iraq,” WSWS.org, 23 February 2003, http://www.wsws.org/articles/2004/feb2004/fall-f23.shtml; Knarr, Castro and Fuller, Battle for Fallujah, pp. 13-15; Kaplan, “Five Days in Fallujah.”

13Ibid; West, No True Glory, pp. 9-35; Robert Hodierne, Rob Curtis and Army Times, “Insurgents Attack five sites, kill 17 Iraqi policemen,” USA Today, (15 February 2004); Parenti, “Brutish War.”

14West, No True Glory, pp. 26-35.

15Ibid., pp. 36-44.
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